Studies have shown that Delaware college graduates have a much larger earning potential than non-graduates. Attending a university or college in Delaware and earning a degree is an investment in your future, and you need to think about a college education in those terms to justify the expense for a degree.
Delaware government and higher/secondary education system has a stake in either helping offset the cost of a college education, or helping students prepare for the rigors of study for a college degree. A good measure of how much Delaware government is helping subsidize a higher education is the percentage income it takes a family to send one of its members to school. The lower the percentage, the more Delaware is helping its citizens pay for higher education. The percentage of young and working adults who go to school in Delaware is also a good measure of how well Delaware education systems are preparing its citizens for a higher education degrees.
In Delaware, an average of 29% of a family's income is spent sending one of its members to school, which means that Delaware ranks #43 among the rest of the states in affordability. In terms of higher education, ie. college participation, 30% of Delaware's young adults and 4.10% of the Delaware's working population, ranking #41 and #14 among the other states, respectively, enroll in higher education.*